Ghana, therefore, have encountered a problem common amongst many African sides over the past decade or so – they lack a genuine playmaker, someone who can put them in charge of matches and dominate the midfield zone. A few years ago it seemed Kwadwo Asamoah was set to buck the trend, and become an exciting attacking midfielder. Instead, as he moved through the ranks in European football, he’s been converted to a more functional wing-back role and has found it difficult to rediscover his creative edge at international level.

As it happens, Asamoah now seems likely to be fielded as Ghana’s left-back. There are both defensive and attacking reasons for his backwards shift – David Addy has often played left-back over the last year but didn’t make the 23-man squad, and coach Kwesi Appiah finds himself with just six recognised defenders, from which has to draw a four-man defence. Furthermore, Jordan Ayew’s hattrick as a substitute in Ghana’s 4-0 thrashing of South Korea on Monday night means he’s surely played his way into the left-wing position. Asamoah’s not a natural left-back, but he’ll still be a force. The problem, of course, is that his guile will be missed from midfield.

Solid back four

The rest of the defence is solid. In front of a good goalkeeper in Adam Kwarasey, Ghana boast two good all-round centre-backs – Jonathan Mensah broke into the side at the last World Cup, while John Boye is a more recent addition, but they’ve played together enough to have a fine partnership. Both are good in the air and composed on the ball, and consistent enough to allow Ghana to soak up pressure for long periods.

Probable Ghana XI

Harrison Afful can play on either flank – and it’s slightly surprising he hasn’t been tried more on the left – and is in competition with Daniel Opare to start on the right. Both are talented on the ball but play reserved roles.

Midfield

Then there’s the crucial zone, the midfield trio. Ghana have great quality in this zone, with Michael Essien not as good at his peak, but not as bad as recent club performances would suggest. He’s more influential in possession than you might expect, and alongside Sulley Muntari forms a combative but sometimes inventive midfield duo.

They provide the support for Kevin-Prince Boateng, who has returned to the side after rather blatantly retiring from international football to avoid the qualification phase (having only declared himself Ghanaian shortly before the last World Cup).

He’s an odd player, now accustomed to a number ten role at club level, but providing physicality, hard work and good finishing rather than genuine playmaking – he can provide tricks on the ball, but doesn’t always open up defences, with has furthered Ghana’s problem with relying on the counter-attack.

Forwards

Ghana play a 4-2-3-1, but they effectively play three forwards across the pitch – including two brothers. Andre Ayew starts on the right and plays his defensive role solidly before storming forward on the break, although his goalscoring record of 4 in 47 caps is extremely disappointing for a player who is often a huge goal threat for Marseille. On the opposite flank, Jordan surely can’t be ignored following his recent hattrick, although Appiah will be concerned about his defensive discipline, and could be tempted to bring Asamoah forward once again, or even shift Muntari out to the wing, where he played in the last World Cup. Another attacking option is Abdul Waris, vaguely similar to Ayew, while the speedy Christian Atsu can play on either side.

Upfront is Asamoah Gyan, still roaming the channels, charging in behind and shooting from crazy angles, often with great success. But once again, without wishing to repeat the point too much, he’s a counter-attacking player. Against a deep defence he doesn’t know what to do with himself, and Appiah doesn’t have a proper Plan B.

Conclusion

There’s an obvious style, and an obvious weakness. Can Ghana break down packed defences? Maybe not. But they’re in a strong group, and therefore relying primarily on counter-attacking is entirely justifiable against good Germany and Portugal sides, and a USA team which might leave gaps out wide because of their use of a diamond.

It’s tough to say that Ghana have genuinely progressed since 2010 – but then again, considering they were a whisker away from a semi-final place, being in the same shape isn’t a bad thing.

Quick guide

Coach: Kwesi Appiah – seems to have the squad united

Formation: 4-2-3-1

Key player: Asamoah – must to take charge of this side

Strength: Defensive discipline and great speed on the break

Weakness: Reliance on the break, and no Plan B

Key tactical question: Can Ghana keep it tight at the back? They might not be good at chasing games

5 Responses to “ Ghana: still great on the break ”

pb on June 10, 2014 at 6:44 pm

If the prep matches are any indication, Mohammed Rabiu might start in midfield alongside Essien. The guy looks a little lethargic at times but covers a lot of ground actually and calmly sprays the passes around.

Considering Muntari is one of the most erratic players on the planet on a good day and has rarely shown up in do or die matches over the years, I can certainly see some good reasons Appiah might want to drop him from the first 11.

It’s worth noting that Kwarasey, while being a more than decent player individually by African goalkeeper standards, has found it very difficult to play for Ghana so far. He has looked shaky in all but one or two of his matches and him coming off his line pretty much always spelled disaster in almost comical fashion.

The most promising way to attack Ghana would therefore be trying to get in behind the two centre backs, who struggle to track back once they’ve pushed the defense up. They do that a little too early and too often for my liking and unless Kwarasey steps up his game he can’t sweep up balls reliably.

pb on June 10, 2014 at 6:55 pm

Also, no mention of Christian Atsu, the argueably most creative and technically gifted player ?

( sorry for double post, site isn’t very responsive at the moment, probably due to onslaught of people reading the previews )

Shaun on June 10, 2014 at 9:36 pm

Asamoah was moved to left back because Daniel Opare was injured. Expect Asamoah at LW and Afful at LB.

I sincerely doubt Essien + Muntari will be the starting pivot. Acquah or Rabiu are guaranteed to start in my opinion.

Jordan Ayew is still behind Waris in the pecking order, who has nardly gotten a mention, but has been a key player for Appiah. Boateng is by no means a guaranteed starter – he has to fight Waris or Essien for a starting berth. Not to mention Jordan Ayew, Mubarak Wakaso and Christian Atsu are just waiting to pounce on a starting spot.

They struggle to score? 25 goals in 8 qualifying matches puts that into question.

Kane Prior on June 12, 2014 at 7:01 am

For me this is a weaker team than at the last world cup. They had the surprise factor back then and a very balanced team, now the manager doesn’t know his best eleven and the team is in a very tough group. Saying that, they are still a compact team and if Portugal or Germany make any mistakes, Ghana have the players to punish them. I doubt they will progress through, but they should make for uncomfortable opponents in this group.

On a side note, I would not start Boateng through the middle; he thrives when around other creative players, supplying him with chances and needing his energy, not something the Ghana team has or needs from him.

Cali on June 12, 2014 at 7:31 pm

It’s a shame that Conte decided to convert Asamoah into a fullback. He could have become one of the best central midfielders across Europe.